*67 Decision will be entered for the respondent.
P made interest-free demand loans to family trusts. Held, R's method of valuing the gifts made to the trusts reflects the reasonable value of the use of the money lent.
*1040 OPINION
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioner's Federal gift tax in the following taxable periods and amounts:
Calendar period ending | Deficiency |
Sept. 30, 1980 | $ 15,599 |
Dec. 31, 1980 | 19,782 |
Mar. 31, 1981 | 20,515 |
Jun. 30, 1981 | 30,096 |
Sept. 30, 1981 | 32,379 |
Dec. 31, 1982 | 75,140 |
Dec. 31, 1983 | 142,033 |
Dec. 31, 1984 | 2,954 |
Total deficiencies | 338,498 |
The issue we must decide is the appropriate interest rate to use in valuing the gift that results from an interest-free demand loan pursuant to
The facts of this case have been fully stipulated pursuant to
The Alyssa Marie Alpine Trust (First Trust) is an irrevocable trust formed by petitioner and Melvin S. Cohen, petitioner's spouse, pursuant to a trust agreement for the Benefit of Alyssa Marie Alpine dated October 19, 1977, which designates Alyssa Marie Alpine (Alyssa) as its principal beneficiary. Alyssa is petitioner's granddaughter. The Alyssa Marie Alpine Trust No. 2 (Second Trust) is an irrevocable trust formed by Edith Phillips (Edith), petitioner's mother, pursuant to a trust agreement dated March 13, 1980, which designates Alyssa as its principal beneficiary. The 1983 Cohen Family Trust (1983 Trust) is an irrevocable trust Edith formed pursuant to a trust agreement creating the 1983 Cohen Family Trust dated June 3, 1983, which designates certain lineal descendants of Edith as its principal beneficiaries. (Hereinafter, the First Trust, the Second Trust, and the 1983 Trust are referred to collectively as the Trusts.) For Federal income tax purposes, petitioner and the *1041 Trusts reported on the cash basis method*69 of accounting and used the calendar year as their taxable years.
Subsequent to and in reliance upon the court's decision in
Petitioner did not report as taxable gifts the transfer of the value of the non-interest-bearing loans to the Trusts relying on the Crown decision that such non-interest-bearing loans did not give rise to taxable gifts. On August 16, 1984, after the Supreme Court's decision in
For the calendar periods ended September 30, 1980, December 31, 1980, March 31, 1981, June 30, 1981, September 30, 1981, December 31, 1982, December 31, 1983, and December 31, 1984, respondent concedes that petitioner is entitled to treat all gifts made by petitioner as being made one-half by petitioner and one-half by petitioner's spouse in accordance with section 2513.
In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the non-interest-bearing demand loans made by petitioner to the Trusts resulted*72 in taxable gifts. Respondent further determined that the value of each taxable gift is calculated by applying the following interest rates to the loan balances outstanding during each calendar year (simple interest):
Taxable year | Interest rate |
1979 | 6.0% |
1980 | 11.5 |
1981 | 12.0 |
1982 | 10.6 |
1983 | 8.6 |
1984 | 9.9 |
These rates are set forth in
The statutory interest rates applicable to refunds and deficiencies of tax pursuant to section 6621 for the calendar years ending December 31, 1979, through December 31, 1984, are as follows:
Period | Interest rate |
Feb. 1, 1978 -- Jan. 31, 1980 | 6% |
Feb. 1, 1980 -- Jan. 31, 1982 | 12 |
Feb. 1, 1982 -- Dec. 31, 1982 | 20 |
Jan. 1, 1983 -- June 30, 1983 | 16 |
July 1, 1983 -- Dec. 31, 1984 | 11 |
*1043 The average annual rates of interest for three-month Treasury bills for the calendar years ending December 31, 1979 through December 31, 1983, used by the Treasury Department in developing
Year | Interest rate |
1979 | 10.041% |
1980 | 11.506 |
1981 | 14.029 |
1982 | 10.686 |
1983 | 8.63 |
*73 Generally, the interest rate on a demand loan does not exceed the interest rate on a term loan that is identical in all other respects.
From January 1, 1980, through December 31, 1984, the trustees of the First Trust invested the proceeds of the non-interest-bearing loans at issue primarily in short-term tax-exempt investments. From March 13, 1980 (the date of formation of the Second Trust), through December 31, 1984, the trustees of the Second Trust invested the proceeds of the non-interest-bearing loans at issue primarily in short-term tax-exempt investments and tax-exempt money market funds. From June 3, 1983 (the date of formation of the 1983 Trust) through December 31, 1984, the trustees of the 1983 Trust invested the proceeds of the non-interest-bearing loans at issue primarily in short-term tax-exempt investments. The weighted average annual percentage returns realized by the First Trust, the Second Trust and the 1983 Trust during the periods at issue are as follows:
First Trust | Return |
1979 | 3.26% |
1/1/80 -- 6/30/80 * | 8.29 |
Total | 5.76 |
Second Trust | |
1980 | 4.69 |
1981 | 7.05 |
1982 | 7.20 |
1983 | 5.50 |
1/1/84 -- 3/1/84 | 13.61 |
Total | 6.45 |
1983 Trust | |
1983 | .84 |
1/1/84 -- 3/1/84 | 17.89 |
Total | 5.63 |
*1044 In determining the gift tax deficiencies for the periods involved here, respondent redetermined the total amount of taxable gifts for periods prior to the period at issue here. In this redetermination of prior gifts, respondent included an amount for the taxable gift attributable to non-interest-bearing demand loans made by petitioner prior to the period at issue here. Petitioner concedes that respondent's valuation of the prior period interest-free loans is consistent with his valuation of the interest-free loans for the periods before the Court.
The parties agree that in determining the value of the gifts petitioner made during the periods at issue here, the applicable interest rate the Court determines shall be applied to the average annualized loan amount of the loans made to the Trusts during the appropriate periods as follows:
Period | |||
Calendar | First | Second | 1983 |
quarter ended: | trust | trust | trust |
6/30/79 | $ 56,017 | ||
9/30/79 | 356,644 | ||
12/31/79 | 423,554 | ||
3/31/80 | 554,643 | $ 57,212 | |
6/30/80 | 449,311 | 465,530 | |
9/30/80 | 972,375 | ||
12/31/80 | 992,875 | ||
3/31/81 | 1,076,823 | ||
6/30/81 | 1,355,664 | ||
9/30/81 | 1,400,937 | ||
12/31/81 | 1,403,713 | ||
Year | |||
1982 | 7,004,174 | ||
1983 | 5,589,432 | $ 2,831,547 | |
1984 | 322,276 | 1,116,170 |
*75 The parties stipulated to the hypothetical rate of return which would have been realized on the loans at issue using the interest rates specified in sections 25.2512-5(e) and *1045 25.2512-9(e), Gift Tax Regs. A summary of the parties' stipulation is as follows:
Applicable | |||
actuarial | Return | ||
First trust | Total loans | rate | (rate X loans) |
6/15/79 -- 6/30/80 | $ 7,057,471 | 6% | $ 423,448 |
Second trust | |||
3/14/80 -- 11/30/83 | 51,418,822 | 6% | 3,085,129 |
12/1/83 -- 3/1/84 | 673,817 | 10 | 67,382 |
1983 trust | |||
6/6/83 -- 11/30/83 | 5,879,234 | 6% | 352,754 |
12/1/83 -- 3/1/84 | 4,003,465 | 10 | 400,346 |
69,032,809 | 4,329,059 |
Overall yield for all of the loans: 6.271%
The issue before us is how to value the gift that results from an interest-free demand loan. 3 Petitioner loaned money interest-free to trusts created for the benefit of family members. Petitioner loaned the funds to the trusts after the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held, in
Petitioner argues that the appropriate rates are those found in section 25.2512-5 or 25.2512-9, Gift Tax Regs., as applicable to each taxable period pursuant to
Interest-free demand loans result in taxable gifts of the reasonable value of the use of the money lent.
Valuation, however, was not at issue in the appeal before the Supreme Court. Following the Supreme Court's decision in Dickman, respondent issued a revenue procedure for determining the interest rate to value *79 the gift resulting from an interest-free demand loan.
*1047 The Dickman opinion alludes to use of a market rate of interest to value the loans. Three-month Treasury bills and the section 6621 rates both reflect market rates of interest for short-term loans. Treasury bills are auctioned and issued weekly on the public market. Section 6621 provides for an adjustable interest rate based on the prime rate in all of the years before us.
Petitioner argues that
Petitioner, however, points to the Supreme Court's acknowledgment that a demand loan, because of its inherently uncertain term, will bear a lesser interest rate than a term loan identical in other respects.
First, the interest rates prevailing in 1973 may well have been reflected by section 25.2512-5, Gift Tax Regs., but there is no *82 doubt that, in the years before the Court, prevailing interest rates were much higher. Consequently, we can say that the regulation does not apply the market interest rate standard articulated by the Supreme Court in Dickman. Second, respondent applies in this case the lesser of Treasury bill rates or section 6621 rates. As a result, the interest rates applied by respondent in this case are comparable, if not identical, to the rates respondent used in Dickman which were not criticized by the Supreme Court. Finally, because the rates that respondent utilizes in valuing the gifts in this case are market rates extant while the loans were outstanding, there is no "retroactive" application of unforeseeable interest rates to petitioner's prejudice.
Respondent's "lesser of" three-month Treasury bills and section 6621 rates standard allows taxpayers to use a relatively low interest rate to compute gift values. The U.S. Government is the debtor with the lowest credit risk; its interest rates, therefore, should be lower than other market interest rates payable by other debtors whose credit worthiness is not so firm as that of the United States. See
Petitioner also argues that the actual yield of the loan proceeds is the proper measure of the gift if section 25.2512-5, Gift Tax Regs., does not apply. The issue, however, is not what the donee of an interest-free loan could have made if it invested the funds. On this point of *1049 valuation, the Supreme Court commented that "the Commissioner need not establish that the funds lent did in fact produce a particular amount of revenue; it is sufficient for the Commissioner to establish that a certain yield could readily be secured and*84 that the reasonable value of the use of the funds can be reliably ascertained."
Petitioner also contends that, in any event, the interest rates in section 483 provide a cap on the interest rate respondent may impute for gift tax purposes, based on the Seventh Circuit's decision in
*85 Section 483 6 generally provided in the years at issue that *1050 interest would be imputed in installment sales contracts at an "unstated interest" rate if the contract did not provide for a "safe harbor" test rate of interest. The "safe harbor" test rates during the periods at issue were 6-percent simple interest until June, 30, 1981, and 9-percent simple interest thereafter.
*86 The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, to which an appeal would lie in this case, recently considered section 483 in a gift tax context in
This Court held that the section 483 "safe harbor" interest rate could not be relied on for gift tax valuation purposes. The Seventh Circuit reversed and held that section 483 applies to the gift tax provisions of the Code as well as to the income tax provisions.
*1051 although valuation of property, for purposes of gift taxes, is not directly related to the imputation of taxes on installment contracts for purposes of income taxation; a taxpayer who complies with Sec. 483 and charges a "safe harbor" rate of interest on an installment sales contract, should not be penalized if the "safe harbor" rate of interest is below the market rate of interest for purposes of gift tax valuation.
The taxpayer in Ballard sold property on the installment method. Section 483, therefore, applied by its terms to the taxpayer in Ballard. The Ballard court held that when a taxpayer complies with the section 483 safe harbor rules in an installment sale, respondent cannot impute a higher market rate of interest to find a gift. The section 483 safe harbor protects taxpayers who sell property using the installment method for purposes of the gift tax as well as the income tax.
Section 483 by its terms, however, does not apply to transactions other than*88 contracts for the sale or exchange of property. We look, therefore, to the purpose of section 483 to determine what effect it might have on transactions other than installment sales. Section 483 was designed by Congress to prevent sellers from converting ordinary income into capital gain by agreeing to deferred payment of the purchase price without stating how much of the deferred payments constituted interest. H. Rept. 749, 88th Cong., 1st Sess. (1963), 1964-1 C.B. (Part 2) 196. In the same transaction, buyers of depreciable property were able to depreciate the acquired property using an inflated basis. Section 483 was designed to provide a basis rule for installment sales by recharacterizing part of the stated principal payments as interest. The purposes underlying section 483 had nothing to do with valuation. In promulgating regulations that established "safe-harbor" and "imputed" interest rates, the Treasury Department did not peg the rates to any market interest rate. We conclude that section 483 does not provide appropriate interest rates under the Dickman standard for use in valuing the gift resulting from an interest-free demand loan.
*89 Like section 483, section 482 also provides an imputed interest rate. We consider section 482 because, unlike section 483, it provides a rule specifically for imputing *1052 interest rates on interest-free demand loans in transactions between certain related taxpayers.
In general, section 482 7 provides for the allocation of income and deductions among taxpayers. The purpose of section 482 is to place transactions of controlled taxpayers dealing with each other on a tax parity commensurate with the dealings between uncontrolled taxpayers dealing at arm's length.
*90 During the period at issue prior to July 1, 1981, the safe harbor rate was between 6 and 8 percent per annum simple interest.
The section 482 rates were changed occasionally to reflect market interest rates. The rate changes during the periods at issue, however, lagged considerably behind actual market changes. 8Dickman requires us to measure the economic value associated with the use of the money; this value is "readily measurable by reference to current interest rates."
Petitioner also argues that the rates chosen by respondent in
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
Footnotes
1. The parties in docket Nos. 7172-87 and 7690-87 (the petitioners are Melvin S. Cohen, and Edith Phillips, respectively) have stipulated that they will be bound by our decision in docket No. 7174-87 as if each of the petitioners were the petitioner in docket No. 7174-87.↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as in effect for the years at issue, unless otherwise indicated.↩
*. Date of repayment of all loans.↩
3. Congress resolved the issue for interest-free and low-interest demand gift loans outstanding after June 6, 1984, unless the loan was repaid or the interest rate was modified before Sept. 17, 1984. Sec. 7872. All of the loans at issue in this case were repaid on Mar. 1, 1984, prior to the time the new rules were in effect.↩
4. The revenue procedure restates the method described in Information Release
IR 84-60↩ , dated May 11, 1984.5.
T.C. Memo. 1987-128↩ .6. Sec. 483 provides, in pertinent part:
SEC. 483. INTEREST ON CERTAIN DEFERRED PAYMENTS.
(a) Amount Constituting Interest. -- For purposes of this title, in the case of any contract for the sale or exchange of property there shall be treated as interest that part of a payment to which this section applies which bears the same ratio to the amount of such payment as the total unstated interest under such contract bears to the total of the payments to which this section applies which are due under such contract.
(b) Total Unstated Interest. -- For purposes of this section, the term "total unstated interest" means, with respect to a contract for the sale or exchange of property, an amount equal to the excess of --
(1) the sum of the payments to which this section applies which are due under the contract, over
(2) the sum of the present values of such payments and the present values of any interest payments due under the contract.
For purposes of paragraph (2), the present value of a payment shall be determined, as of the date of the sale or exchange, by discounting such payment at the rate, and in the manner, provided in regulations prescribed by the Secretary. Such regulations shall provide for discounting on the basis of 6-month brackets and shall provide that the present value of any interest payment due not more than 6 months after the date of the sale or exchange is an amount equal to 100 percent of such payment.(c) Payments to Which Section Applies. --
(1) In general. -- Except as provided in subsection (f), this section shall apply to any payment on account of the sale or exchange of property which constitutes part or all of the sales price and which is due more than 6 months after the date of such sale or exchange under a contract --
(A) under which some or all of the payments are due more than one year after the date of such sale or exchange, and
(B) under which, using a rate provided by regulations prescribed by the Secretary for purposes of this subparagraph, there is total unstated interest.↩
Any rate prescribed for determining whether there is total unstated interest for purposes of subparagraph (B) shall be at least one percentage point lower than the rate prescribed for purposes of subsection (b)(2).7. SEC. 482. ALLOCATION OF INCOME AND DEDUCTIONS AMONG TAXPAYERS.
In any case of two or more organizations, trades, or businesses (whether or not incorporated, whether or not organized in the United States, and whether or not affiliated) owned or controlled directly or indirectly by the same interests, the Secretary may distribute, apportion, or allocate gross income, deductions, credits, or allowances between or among such organizations, trades, or businesses, if he determines that such distribution, apportionment, or allocation is necessary in order to prevent evasion of taxes or clearly to reflect the income of any of such organizations, trades, or businesses.↩
8. TRA 1984, in sec. 44(b)(2) of Pub. L. 98-369, 98 Stat. 559, 1984-3 C.B. (Vol. 1) 67, provided for modification of the sec. 482 safe harbor rates by using the applicable Federalrate pursuant to sec. 1274 (d).↩